Sustainability Challenges in Diagnostic Healthcare: Environmental Risks and Policy Responses

Authors

Dr. Koushik Ray

Director CPL Diagnostics Pvt Ltd CZ-8, Metropolitan, Canal South Road Kolkata (India)

Article Information

DOI: 10.51584/IJRIAS.2026.110200027

Subject Category: Environment

Volume/Issue: 11/2 | Page No: 312-319

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-02-19

Accepted: 2026-02-26

Published: 2026-02-27

Abstract

Diagnostic healthcare—clinical laboratories, pathology services, imaging support units, and point-of-care testing—has become indispensable for modern medicine. Yet, the same systems that improve clinical outcomes can impose significant environmental burdens through biomedical waste generation, single-use plastics, chemical hazards, energy-intensive instrumentation, water consumption, and carbon emissions across supply chains. This paper examines the major sustainability challenges in diagnostic healthcare, focusing on environmental risks arising from laboratory operations and the policy responses required to mitigate them. Using a qualitative, policy-analytical approach grounded in environmental health governance, the paper maps key risk pathways: infectious and sharps waste, chemical and pharmaceutical residues, microplastics, wastewater contamination, and greenhouse gas emissions from energy use and logistics. The analysis highlights structural barriers including regulatory gaps, weak enforcement, fragmented waste infrastructure, limited green procurement, cost pressures, inadequate staff training, and insufficient environmental performance measurement. The paper proposes a multi-level policy framework: (i) strengthening regulation and compliance, (ii) implementing circular economy strategies such as extended producer responsibility and sustainable procurement, (iii) accelerating decarbonization through energy efficiency and renewables, (iv) improving segregation and treatment systems, (v) digitizing environmental monitoring, and (vi) building a culture of sustainability through training, accreditation incentives, and transparent reporting. The paper concludes with actionable recommendations and an implementation roadmap for low- and middle-income settings, where diagnostic expansion must be aligned with environmental protection and public health resilience.

Keywords

Diagnostic healthcare, medical laboratories, biomedical waste, sustainability, environmental governance, green procurement

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References

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